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Don't assume that the sum of national crisis-management activities will create a desirable framework for the longer term.
Despite officials' best efforts to fight raging financial fires, it is a good bet that the capital markets will remain in crisis mode for many months to come. Unfortunately, there is a gaping hole in policymaking--that is, the need to look ahead a few years and to sketch out what the global financial and economic landscape should look like.
Of course, any attempt to mandate a definitive architecture for finance would be impossible in such a fast-moving situation. But a worse alternative is to assume that national governments in the heat of battle, frantically plugging one hole after another, can think beyond the next day, or that the sum of national crisis-management activities, all frantically established in ad hoc fashion, would constitute a desirable global framework for the longer term. Without some planning, we are likely to see a series of jerry-built systems that will produce a global marketplace rife with trouble spots and opportunities for regulatory arbitrage.
That's why a group of high-level experts who are not in the fray ought to be convened to vent ideas and come up with a few visions of where global finance should be headed. There is no perfect convener for such a group, but perhaps the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, the so-called central bank for central banks, could undertake the task. The members ought to be a mix of former officials with extensive financial experience and a number of highly reputable thinkers who might be able to bring fresher ideas to the table. Paul Volcker could serve as chair. From the United States, for example, people such as Warren Buffett, Robert Rubin and my Yale colleague Robert Shiller could be tapped. People of similar caliber from outside the United States could be induced to serve, too. The BIS would supply the research staff.
The group would make its recommendations to the G7 and governments from China, India, Brazil, Saudi Arabia and others within three months. The goal would not be to present a final blueprint, but to provide some guideposts and raise some critical questions that governments should not ignore. Here are a few examples:
What should new financial regulation look like?
We will undoubtedly emerge with a great appetite for tighter regulation of financial institutions. But the right balance between regulation and laissez faire is critical, and it is not now clear what the underlying regulatory principles ...
Source: HighBeam Research, We Need a New Road Map.(Global Investor)